SPJ Leads

SPJ News

SPJ Blogs: Newest Posts

Quill Headlines

Journalist's Toolbox

@SPJ_Tweets

Connect with SPJ

SPJ on Facebook

Upcoming Eventsand Deadlines

Become an SPJ Member

For more than 100 years the Society of Professional Journalists has been dedicated to encouraging a climate in which journalism can be practiced more freely and fully, stimulating high standards and ethical behavior in the practice of journalism and perpetuating a free press.

About the Foundation

Since its founding in 1961, the Sigma Delta Chi Foundation has promoted excellence and ethics in journalism. The SDX Foundation is a tax-exempt, 501(c)(3) organization that supports the educational programs of the Society of Professional Journalists and serves the professional needs of journalists and students pursuing careers in journalism.

Excellence in Journalism 2015Sept 18-20, 2015 – Orlando

Excellence in Journalism is the national journalism conference of the Society of Professional Journalists and the Radio Television Digital News Association. Join us in September in Orlando for training, networking, workshops and more!

SPJ Leads

SPJ News

SPJ Blogs: Newest Posts

Quill Headlines

Journalist's Toolbox

@SPJ_Tweets

Connect with SPJ

SPJ on Facebook

Upcoming Eventsand Deadlines

Become an SPJ Member

For more than 100 years the Society of Professional Journalists has been dedicated to encouraging a climate in which journalism can be practiced more freely and fully, stimulating high standards and ethical behavior in the practice of journalism and perpetuating a free press.

About the Foundation

Since its founding in 1961, the Sigma Delta Chi Foundation has promoted excellence and ethics in journalism. The SDX Foundation is a tax-exempt, 501(c)(3) organization that supports the educational programs of the Society of Professional Journalists and serves the professional needs of journalists and students pursuing careers in journalism.

Excellence in Journalism 2015Sept 18-20, 2015 – Orlando

Excellence in Journalism is the national journalism conference of the Society of Professional Journalists and the Radio Television Digital News Association. Join us in September in Orlando for training, networking, workshops and more!

INDIANAPOLIS - As leaders of the congressional news-media galleries prepared for a critical meeting on Tuesday with Senate Rules Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd, other leading journalism organizations joined the Society of Professional Journalists in protesting the Senate's plan to squeeze the four U.S. Capitol press galleries into two.

Senators want to evict the periodical and photographic press galleries from their spaces in the Capitol, forcing them to use galleries used by daily newspapers, wire services and broadcast outlets. The consolidation would make the galleries so overcrowded that some journalists will not be able to use them.

"The main galleries are already overcrowded when they are needed most, and consolidating them will deny some journalists timely access to newsmakers and the workings of the Senate," reads the joint statement from the journalism organizations. "Consolidation would have the greatest impact on news organizations beyond the Beltway, those that do not have designated space in the galleries. That would erode the quality of the news reports that millions of Americans receive about their representatives in Washington."

Dodd is scheduled to discuss the press gallery consolidation issue with gallery members at 4 p.m. July 10. Joining the Society in its protest are the Associated Press Managing Editors, the American Society of Newspaper Editors, the National Newspaper Association, the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press and the Education Writers Association.

SPJ President-Elect Al Cross, a political writer and columnist for The (Louisville) Courier-Journal, and SPJ President Ray Marcano, an assistant managing editor at the Dayton (Ohio) Daily News, have led an effort urging the nation's news outlets to join SPJ and other news organizations in asking the Senate to reconsider its plan to cram four U.S. Capitol press galleries into the space of two.

"We greatly appreciate other journalism groups joining this effort," Cross said, "and we urge anyone concerned about this issue to make their feelings known to Sen. Dodd through the Rules Committee office at 202/224-6352."

A copy of the organizations' joint statement on the Senate plan to consolidate press galleries can be found below:JOINT STATEMENT OF LEADING JOURNALISM ORGANIZATIONS ON SENATE MAJORITY'S PLAN TO CONSOLIDATE PRESS GALLERIES:

As representatives of the nation's journalists and their service to the public, we join together to register our strong objections to the U.S. Senate's plan to consolidate the periodical and photographic press galleries with the main print and broadcast galleries.

The main galleries are already overcrowded when they are needed most, and consolidating them will deny some journalists timely access to newsmakers and the workings of the Senate. Consolidation would have the greatest impact on news organizations beyond the Beltway, those that do not have designated space in the galleries. That would erode the quality of the news reports that millions of Americans receive about their representatives in Washington.

We urge the chairman of the Rules Committee, the Majority Leader and other senators to maintain the longstanding tradition of the galleries as the eyes and ears of the public, and abandon the plan to evict the photographic and periodical galleries from their space in the Capitol. Abandoning this plan would uphold the principle, embodied in the First Amendment, of public access to government and elected representatives.